Quazi Sadruzzaman is the greatest men's tennis singles player in
UMass Boston history. Period. He is the only player in history to
win the Little East Conference Flight One Singles Championship all
four times and also captured the Flight One Doubles crown with
partner Dat Nguyen in 2004 to give him five overall LEC titles. A
four-time LEC Player of the Week, Sadruzzaman played all 56 of his
singles matches from the number one spot in the lineup and won 50
of them for an astounding winning percentage of .893 for the
highest mark of any player at UMB with over 20 matches played. His
win total is also the most in school annals. The netter didn't just
win matches, he dominated them. From April 27, 2002 to May 8, 2004,
he won 28 straight singles contests to go undefeated for the final
two and a half seasons of his career and won 25 of those matches in
straight sets, including a string of 17 straight outings, where he
dropped no more than four games in a set.

Sadruzzaman made it his trademark to play short matches, having
won 44 of his matches in straight sets and proved to be tough even
in defeat, taking his opponent to three sets in half of his six
losses. His success wasn't limited to singles play as evidenced by
a 36-17 record in doubles action for a .679 career winning
percentage to rank eighth among players with two or more seasons at
UMB. A 2004 UMass Boston graduate, his victory total in doubles
play stands as the second most in school history and contributes to
an overall combined record of 86-23 for a .789 winning mark to rank
first in combined wins and fourth in combined winning percentage
for players with two or more seasons for the Beacons. He finished
his career in style, posting a 24-3 combined record as a senior for
an impressive .889 winning percentage and won 12 consecutive
matches to close out his career, including six in doubles play.

In 2013, Sadruzzaman became the second Beacon to earn a place in
the prestigious Little East Conference Hall of Fame. The
tennis great was the first student-athlete in UMass Boston history
to be enshrined by the conference.